BEIJING, March 7 (Xinhua) -- China Construction Bank
(CCB), which has been listed in Hong Kong, so far has no plan of listing on the
domestic A-share market, said CCB board chairman Guo Shuqing, also a political
advisor.
"The CCB's Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) last year
exceeded 13 percent, which was a relatively high level, so the bank so far has
no plan of domestic listing," Guo told Xinhua on the sidelines of the Tenth
National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC), which opened on March 3.
The bank's CAR, a measure of its available capital in
proportion to its outstanding loans, was already above the eight percent
requirement by international standard.
A-share market trading is limited to Chinese mainland
investors and a handful of foreign institutions only. Many Chinese companies
chose to list overseas when the mainland stock market was bearish from 2001 to
2005.
CCB is the country's third largest commercial bank
and one of the "Big Four" state banks.
There has been no specific plan concerning the CCB's
overseas purchase, Guo said, adding the bank's newly-added loans in January
amounted to 70 billion yuan (nine billion U.S. dollars).
Guo said the preparation for a share-holding reform
has been steadily underway. The central government selected the CCB, Bank of
China, and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China for share-holding reform in
September 2003. The three banks have gone public in Hong Kong.
The CCB, listed in Hong Kong in October 2005, was the
first Chinese mainland's major state-owned commercial bank listed overseas among
the "Big Four" state banks, which also comprises Agricultural Bank of China.
The Bank of China and the Industrial and Commercial
Bank of China are now listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.